Subject: [NonFanficButWorthyOfReading] A submission from an ex-FFMLer
From: "Trisha L. Sebastian" <103707.3614@compuserve.com>
Date: 4/8/1996, 10:58 PM
To: FanFic Mailing List

FROM:	"James Stubbs", INTERNET:STUBBS@scifaculty.coker.edu
TO:	(unknown), INTERNET:AGDRACO@IPA.NET
	(unknown), INTERNET:ROGUE6969@AOL.COM
	Trisha L. Sebastian, 103707,3614
DATE:	4/3/96 8:06 PM

Re:	Cat Bathing As A Martial Art...

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From: "James Stubbs" <STUBBS@scifaculty.coker.edu>
To: agdraco@ipa.net, Rogue6969@aol.com, 103707.3614@compuserve.com
Date:          Wed, 3 Apr 1996 19:38:25 EST
Subject:       Cat Bathing As A Martial Art...
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Message-ID: <22D4AED05ED@scifaculty.coker.edu>

            Cat Bathing as a Martial Art

    Some people say cats never have to be bathed.  They say cats lick
themselves clean.  They say cats have a special enzyme of some sort in
their saliva that works like new, improved Wisk - dislodging the dirt
where it hides and whisking it away. 

    I've spent most of my life believing this folklore.  Like most
blind believers, I've been able to discount all the facts to the 
contrary, the kitty odors that lurk in the corners of the garage and 
dirt smudges that cling to the throw rug by the fireplace. 

    The time comes, however, when a man must face reality: when he
must look squarely in the face of massive public sentiment to the 
contrary and announce:  "This cat smells like a port-a-potty on a hot 
day in Juarez." 

    When that day arrives at your house, as it has in mine, I have
some advice you might consider as you place your feline friend under 
your arm and head for the bathtub: 

    --  Know that although the cat has the advantage of quickness and
lack of concern for human life, you have the advantage of strength. 
Capitalize on that advantage by selecting the battlefield.  Don't try 
to bathe him in an open area where he can force you to chase him.  
Pick a very small bathroom. If your bathroom is more than four feet 
square, I recommend that you get in the tub with the cat and close 
the sliding-glass doors as if you were about to take a shower.  (A 
simple shower curtain will not do.  A berserk cat can shred a three-
ply rubber shower curtain quicker than a politician can shift 
positions.)

    --  Know that a cat has claws and will not hesitate to remove all
the skin from your body.  Your advantage here is that you are smart 
and know how to dress to protect yourself.  I recommend canvas 
overalls tucked into high-top construction boots, a pair of steel-
mesh gloves, an army helmet, a hockey face mask, and a long-sleeved 
flak jacket. 

    --  Prepare everything in advance.  There is no time to go out for
a towel when you have a cat digging a hole in your flak jacket.  Draw 
the water. Make sure the bottle of kitty shampoo is inside the glass
enclosure.  Make sure the towel can be reached, even if you are lying 
on your back in the water. 

    --  Use the element of surprise.  Pick up your cat nonchalantly,
as if to simply carry him to his supper dish.  (Cats will not usually
notice your strange attire.  They have little or no interest in 
fashion as a rule. If he does notice your garb, calmly explain that 
you are taking part in a product testing experiment for J.C. Penney.)

    --  Once you are inside the bathroom, speed is essential to
survival.  In a single liquid motion, shut the bathroom door, step 
into the tub enclosure, slide the glass door shut, dip the cat in the 
water and squirt him with shampoo.  You have begun one of the wildest 
45 seconds of your life. 

    Cats have no handles.  Add the fact that he now has soapy fur, and
the problem is radically compounded.  Do not expect to hold on to him 
for more than two or three seconds at a time.  When you have him, 
however, you must remember to give him another squirt of shampoo and 
rub like crazy. He'll then spring free and fall back into the water, 
thereby rinsing himself off. (The national record for cats is three 
latherings, so don't expect too much.)

    --  Next, the cat must be dried.  Novice cat bathers always assume
this part will be the most difficult, for humans generally are worn 
out at this point and the cat is just getting really determined.  In 
fact, the drying is simple compared to what you have just been 
through.  That's because by now the cat is semipermanently affixed to 
your right leg.  You simply pop the drain plug with you foot, reach 
for your towel and wait. (Occasionally, however, the cat will end up 
clinging to the top of your army helmet.  If this happens, the best 
thing you can do is to shake him loose and to encourage him toward 
your leg.) After all the water is drained from the tub, it is a 
simple matter to just reach down and dry the cat. 

    In a few days the cat will relax enough to be removed from your
leg. He will usually have nothing to say for about three weeks and 
will spend a lot of time sitting with his back to you.  He might even 
become psychoceramic and develop the fixed stare of a plaster 
figurine. 

    You will be tempted to assume he is angry.  This isn't usually the
case. As a rule he is simply plotting ways to get through your 
defenses and injure you for life the next time you decide to give him 
a bath. 

    But at least now he smells a lot better. 

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